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"unblushing" Definitions
  1. not blushing
  2. SHAMELESS, UNABASHED

32 Sentences With "unblushing"

How to use unblushing in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "unblushing" and check conjugation/comparative form for "unblushing". Mastering all the usages of "unblushing" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Ms. Lind has given us an unblushing bride who appreciates her own worth.
Decades on, Trump embraced the expansive authority set before him with unblushing ardor.
That's because Her writes a blog, with ever more candor and unblushing detail, about her experiences.
We discussed Hussle's journey from gangbanging to hip hop, but especially our unblushing love for black culture.
With these cultural markers have come expressions of unblushing liberalism that would have been unthinkable a decade ago.
He earned that credibility with unblushing economic nationalism, and specifically his support for protectionist tariffs to curb foreign competition.
But the unblushing, public embrace of the torturer for mutual gain does not appear in any pre-Trump foreign policy manual I know.
Across his first three major releases, he created material in an unblushing polyphonic: He was a showman, a self-styled trickster, a stubborn enigma.
Wilson and Washington, DC, gallery attendant Alessandra Dreyer perceive Babitz's work as in concert with the zeitgeist particularly because of her unblushing treatment of sexual desire and feminine impudence.
The novel also features a female assassin, "a couple of computer wonks" and references to "an ice-cold Bud," which The New Yorker refers to as "unblushing" product placement.
That being so, politicians and officials took note when a memorandum revealed that Steve Bannon, chief strategist to Donald Trump and an unblushing nationalist, has lost his guaranteed seat on the principals committee of the National Security Council (NSC), while two pillars of the foreign policy establishment—the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and the director of national intelligence—were restored as permanent members.
I repeat it now, with words of praise for his splendid and unblushing unveracity.
Algis Budrys, reviewing Trader to the Stars, described Van Rijn as "the boorish slob who makes unblushing use of his naked power, wallows in the sensual luxuries attendant on his commercial success and thus makes a splendid pulp hero"."Galaxy Bookshelf," Galaxy, February 1965, p.153.
In the 19th century as Cairo expanded, Wagh El Birket developed as a contact zone between the wealthy area round the Azbakeya lake and expanding central Cairo. The street ran from the Hotel Bristol to Clot Bey Square. In 1911 the street was described as "the most unblushing in Cairo". On one side was an arcade with cafes underneath.
She was conscious of her weak performances and frequently cried between shows. Virginia Woolf was among the audience at the Bedford Music Hall on 8 April 1921 and described Lloyd as "A mass of corruption – long front teeth – a crapulous way of saying 'desire', and yet a born artist – scarcely able to walk, waddling, aged, unblushing."Gillies, p. 271 In April 1922, Lloyd collapsed in her dressing room after singing "The Cosmopolitan Girl" at the Gateshead Empire in Cardiff.
" 'The Hatmaker's Wife', Featuring David Margulies, Peter Friedman and Marcia Jean Kurtz, Begins Performances Aug. 27" playbill.com, August 27, 2013 Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times wrote: "Mr. Friedman brings unblushing good will and vivacity to assignments that include walking around with a clothespin on his nose..."Brantley, Ben. " 'The Hatmaker’s Wife,' a Comedy by Lauren Yee" The New York Times, September 6, 2013 He appeared Off-Broadway in the musical Fly By Night as "Mr McClam" from May to June 2014.
San Mateo County then annexed part of northern Santa Cruz County in March 1868, including Pescadero and Pigeon Point. Although the formation bill named Redwood City the county seat, a May 1856 election marked by "unblushing frauds perpetuated on an unorganized and wholly unprotected community by thugs and ballot stuffers from San Francisco" named Belmont the county seat.Alexander & Hamm (1916), p. 24. The election results were declared illegal and the county government was moved to Redwood City, with land being donated from the original Pulgas Grant for the county government on .
Though Killigrew drew upon Mateo Alemán's picaresque novel Guzmán de Alfarache for source material, his Thomaso is generally considered strongly autobiographical; it is no accident that the title is the Spanish version of the playwright's given name. Like his earlier comedy The Parson's Wedding (but unlike the tragicomedies that make of most of his dramatic output), Thomaso features abundant bawdy humour and sexual frankness, to the discomfiture of generations of traditional critics. Killigrew's heroine Angellica speaks out for the emotional freedom of women, and Thomaso is an unblushing libertine. Critical responses to autobiographical works often confuse the author and the work.
Known as the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road, it was to run from Eugene, Oregon to Fort Boise in Idaho."Oregon Central Military Road", Oregon State Office, Bureau of Land Management, United States Department of Interior, Portland, Oregon, 17 September 2009."Oregon History: Uncle Sam's Handiwork", Oregon Blue Book, Oregon State Archives, Office of the Secretary of State, State of Oregon, Salem, Oregon, 17 September 2009."Unblushing Land Frauds; The President Sends Information to Congress How Big Chunks of the Public Domain Have Been Stolen by Wagon Road Companies in Oregon", New York Times, New York, New York, 21 March 1888.
"Unblushing Land Frauds; The President Sends Information to Congress How Big Chunks of the Public Domain Have Been Stolen by Wagon Road Companies in Oregon", New York Times, New York, New York, 21 March 1888. In reality, the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road was a venture designed to acquire public lands at little or no cost to the road company’s investors. Nevertheless, the construction company was able to secure thousands of acres of valuable grazing land in the Warner Valley. Legal disputes kept the ownership of these lands in question for decades, preventing settlers from claiming land grants for farms and ranches.
In 1977 she was offered a position on the University of California Board of Regents by California Governor Jerry Brown. She held the position for a year before she resigned, stating that the position was exhausting her. Her last act in that position was to send a memorandum to the rest of the board, challenging the University's involvement in research into nuclear weapons, and stating that the board had an "unblushing commitment [...] to the development of science and the practice of war, of human and earth destruction". On July 4, 1979, she died of cancer in her Berkeley home.
"Oregon Central Military Road", Oregon State Office, Bureau of Land Management, United States Department of Interior, Portland, Oregon, 17 September 2009."Oregon History: Uncle Sam's Handiwork", Oregon Blue Book, Oregon State Archives, Office of the Secretary of State, State of Oregon, Salem, Oregon, 17 September 2009."Unblushing Land Frauds; The President Sends Information to Congress How Big Chunks of the Public Domain Have Been Stolen by Wagon Road Companies in Oregon" (PDF), New York Times, New York, New York, 21 March 1888. Ownership was finally decided by the United States Supreme Court in a case known as the United States versus the California and Oregon Land Company.
Her position gave her access to the best society, but revelations of unblushing vice in high quarters distressed her, and led her to study the Bible for solace under her grief. She became a most earnest believer, and after a time made a complete renunciation of the world. Becoming Duchess of Gordon in 1827, at the age of 33, she deliberately began a life of earnest devotion. She became interested in schools, chapels, and other Christian undertakings among her own people, and when in 1836 the death of her husband, with whom she had lived in much affection, made her independent, her devotion became more intense than ever.
Indeed, if we consider the unblushing promises of reward > and the staggering nature of the rewards promised in the Gospels, it would > seem that Our Lord finds our desires, not too strong, but too weak. We are > half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when > infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making > mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a > holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased. Piper later argues: > But not only is disinterested morality (doing good "for its own sake") > impossible; it is undesirable.
Scotsman Office 1860 by Peddie and Kinnear Scotsman Buildings as seen from Market Street Apex of the Scotsman Offices of 1899 Barclay House, former home of The Scotsman's offices in Edinburgh The Scotsman was launched in 1817 as a liberal weekly newspaper by lawyer William Ritchie and customs official Charles Maclaren in response to the "unblushing subservience" of competing newspapers to the Edinburgh establishment. The paper was pledged to "impartiality, firmness and independence". After the abolition of newspaper stamp tax in Scotland in 1855, The Scotsman was relaunched as a daily newspaper priced at 1d and a circulation of 6,000 copies. The fledgling paper was originally based at 257 High Street on the Royal Mile.
National Portrait Gallery Whatever his intentions, Wright did not return to Italy, rather he was joined in England by his family soon after. Despite his Roman Catholicism and the strong Protestantism of the Protectorate (1653–1659), Wright seems to have been able to find prestigious work. Indeed, Waterhouse speaks of him engaging in "the most deliberate and unblushing toadying to Cromwell" in his 1658 painting of a small posthumous portrait of Elizabeth Claypole, Oliver Cromwell's daughter (now in the National Portrait Gallery). This is an allegorical portrait depicting Elizabeth as Minerva, leaning on a carved relief representing the goddess springing from the head of Jove with the motto "Ab Jove Principium" – an allusion to Cromwell himself, whose cameo portrait she holds.
The Times, Thursday, Aug 28, 1851; pg. 7; Issue 20892; col B: (A report from the Caledonian Mercury of two women appearing in Edinburgh in reformed dress)'BLOOMERISM IN EDINBURGH:...The singular spectacle thus presented attracted considerable attention even in the retired quarter of the town where it was witnessed, and comments, characterized by freedom more than politeness, were now and again made by urchins who followed the unblushing Bloomers...we learn that the ladies are Americans;...’ The more conservative of society protested that women had ‘lost the mystery and attractiveness as they discarded their flowing robes.”"Women's Clothes and Women's Right", Robert E. Riegel, American Quarterly, 15 (1963):393 Amelia Bloomer herself dropped the fashion in 1859, saying that a new invention, the crinoline, was a sufficient reform that she could return to conventional dress.
97 and in 1898 at the Boston Museum in Boston and the Lafayette Square Opera House in Washington, D.C..Programme for The Strange Adventures of Jack and the Beanstalk (1898) - Library of Congress Collection Her performance as Jack in 1896 was described as belonging: Lessing as Jack Hubbard in Jack and the Beanstalk at the Boston Museum (1898) > ...to the class of womanly women. She was as femininely alluring amid the > bald disclosures of unblushing fleshings as amid the tantalizing > exasperations of swishing draperies. Her beauty was exuberant, voluptuous, > pulse-stirring, a laughing, happy face, crowned and encircled with tangled > masses of dark brown hair, which made her head almost too large, to be sure, > though size counted for little amid the ravishments of sparkling eyes and > kissable dimples that danced in and out on either cheek.
Eventually, the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road Company would build of road and claim about . However, scandal and lawsuits regarding the quality of the road and its route reduced the amount of land actually patented by the company to approximately . Today, Oregon Route 58 follows the first leg of the Oregon Central military road from Eugene over the Cascades to Central Oregon."Oregon Central Military Road", Oregon State Office, Bureau of Land Management, United States Department of Interior, Portland, Oregon, 17 September 2009."Oregon History: Uncle Sam's Handiwork", Oregon Blue Book, Oregon State Archives, Office of the Secretary of State, State of Oregon, Salem, Oregon, 17 September 2009.New York Times, Unblushing Land Frauds, March 21, 1888, p. 1Oregon, 1879, David Rumsey Map Collection, Rand McNally and Company, 3 October 2009. OR 58 through the Willamette National Forest, 1942 The Oregon State Highway Commission added the Willamette Highway No. 18, from Goshen via Oakridge to Crescent, to the state highway system on November 24, 1922.
My censibility, too, is less akute sents I have made the ackwaintance of the fratunity of carpet-baggers, the Right Bower of our party; I hav seed so much unblushing effrontery in these foax that I frekwently feels a glow of conshus virtue when me and they takes a drink. They makes no pertensions to a strict a course of life; but for the original talunt of smartness and getting all you ken I bows to 'em as my betters. They lets out sometimes a feeling for me that borders too near to my taste of contempt; they has indeed told me I was embarlssed by scrupils, which I am whar thar is smarl game, and I suppose is owing to my being born in this part of the world. But I must finish this chapter as I am called off to swar in--a good many is agwIne to jump that fence.--Enq.
James Lees-Milne, The last Stuarts (1984) page 230. Herbert Vaughan called their story ‘an impudent fabrication’ and ‘an unblushing fraud’Herbert M. Vaughan, The last of the royal Stuarts: Henry Stuart, Cardinal Duke of York (1906) page 280 but it was as Sir Charles Petrie wrote ‘proof of the hold which the House of Stuart has never ceased to exercise upon popular imagination in the British Isles, so that ... if a man were to declare himself the heir to the Yorkist or Tudor dynasty, he would attract but little attention, yet if he claim to be a Stuart he will find hundreds ready to believe him’.Sir Charles Petrie, The Jacobite movement: the last phase: 1716-1807 (London, 1950) 187. The brothers’ two publications, Vestiarium Scoticum (Edinburgh, 1842) and Costume of the Clans (Edinburgh, 1843), described by the historian Hugh Trevor-Roper as ‘shot through with pure fantasy and bare faced forgery’,‘Invention of tradition; the Highland tradition of Scotland’ in Eric Hobsbawm and Terrence Ranger, eds.
The Scotsman was launched in 1817 as a liberal weekly newspaper by lawyer William Ritchie and customs official Charles Maclaren in response to the "unblushing subservience" of competing newspapers to the Edinburgh establishment. The paper was pledged to "impartiality, firmness and independence". Its modern editorial line is firmly anti-independence. After the abolition of newspaper stamp tax in Scotland in 1855, The Scotsman was relaunched as a daily newspaper priced at 1d and a circulation of 6,000 copies. The Chartist Northern Star, first published on 26 May 1838, was a pioneer of popular journalism but was very closely linked to the fortunes of the movement and was out of business by 1852. At the same time there was the establishment of more specialised periodicals and the first cheap newspaper in the Daily Telegraph and Courier (1855), later to be known simply as the Daily Telegraph. 1855 first edition of the Daily Telegraph & Courier The Daily Telegraph was first published on 29 June 1855 and was owned by Arthur Sleigh, who transferred it to Joseph Levy the following year. Levy produced it as the first penny newspaper in London. His son, Edward Lawson soon became editor, a post he held until 1885.

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